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Monday, October 09, 2017

Radio Free Asia commemorates 21 years with new QSL effective to December 2017

a reminder to our readers ....Radio Free Asia (RFA)
announces its 21st anniversary QSL. Bringing free press to closed
societies, RFA’s first broadcast was in Mandarin on September 29, 1996 at 2100
UTC. This redefines our QSL designs incorporating one graphic into four
separate QSL cards and giving listeners options submitting reception reports. You
will receive ¼ of the design for one reception report, or get the full sheet
when sending us at least four reception reports. This is RFA’s 65th QSL
design and is used to confirm all valid RFA reception reports from September 1 –
December 2017.

Created by Congress in
1994 and incorporated in 1996, RFA broadcasts in Burmese, Cantonese, Khmer,
Korean to North Korea, Lao, Mandarin (including the Wu dialect), Vietnamese,
Tibetan (Uke, Amdo, and Kham), and Uyghur. RFA strives for accuracy, balance,
and fairness in its editorial content. As a ‘surrogate’ broadcaster, RFA
provides news and commentary specific to each of its target countries, acting
as the free press these countries lack. RFA broadcasts only in local languages
and dialects, and most of its broadcasts comprise news of specific local
interest.More information about Radio
Free Asia, including our current broadcast frequency schedule, is available at
www.rfa.org.

RFA encourages listeners
to submit reception reports.Reception
reports are valuable to RFA as they help us evaluate the signal strength and
quality of our transmissions. RFA confirms all accurate reception reports by
mailing a QSL card to the listener.RFA
welcomes all reception report submissions at http://techweb.rfa.org (follow the
QSL REPORTS link) not only from DX’ers, but also from its general listening
audience

Reception reports are also
accepted by email at qsl@rfa.org and by mail to: